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A search is underway for missing submarine that takes people to see Titanic – Daily Press

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The Associated Press

A rescue operation was underway deep in the waters of the Atlantic Ocean on Monday in search of a submersible vessel that carries people to view the wreckage of the Titanic.

The Joint Rescue Coordination Centre in Halifax, Nova Scotia said the vessel was reported overdue around 9:13 p.m. Sunday, about 435 miles (700 kilometres) south of St. John’s, Newfoundland. Lt. Cmdr. Len Hickey said a Canadian Coast Guard vessel and military aircraft were assisting the search effort, which was being led by the U.S. Coast Guard in Boston.

OceanGate Expeditions confirmed the search for its five-person submersible and said its focus was on those aboard the vessel and their families.

“We are deeply thankful for the extensive assistance we have received from several government agencies and deep sea companies in our efforts to reestablish contact with the submersible,” the company said in a statement. “We are working toward the safe return of the crewmembers.”

David Concannon, an adviser to the company, said Oceangate lost contact with the sub Sunday morning. It had a 96-hour oxygen supply, he said in an email to The Associated Press on Monday afternoon. “Now 32 hours since sub left surface,” said Concannon, who said he was supposed to be on the dive but could not go due to another client matter. He said officials are working to get a remotely operated vehicle that can reach a depth of 6,000 meters (about 20,000 feet) to the site as soon as possible.

Action Aviation confirmed that its company chairman, U.K. businessman Hamish Harding, was one of the tourists on board. The company’s managing director, Mark Butler, told the AP that the crew set out on Friday.

“Every attempt is being made for a rescue mission. There is still plenty of time to facilitate a rescue mission, there is equipment on board for survival in this event,” Butler said. “We’re all hoping and praying he comes back safe and sound.”

The expedition was OceanGate’s third annual voyage to chronicle the deterioration of the iconic ocean liner that struck an iceberg and sank in 1912, killing all but about 700 of the roughly 2,200 passengers and crew. Since the wreckage’s discovery in 1985, it has been slowly succumbing to metal-eating bacteria, and some have predicted the ship could vanish in a matter of decades as holes yawn in the hull and sections disintegrate.

The initial group of tourists was funding the expedition by spending anywhere from $100,000 to $150,000 apiece.

The latest trip was scheduled to depart from St. John’s, Newfoundland, in early May and finish up at the end of June, according to a court documents filed by the company in April with a U.S. District Court in Virginia that presides over Titanic matters.

Unlike submarines that leave and return to port under their own power, submersibles require a ship to launch and recover them. OceanGate hired the Canadian vessel Polar Prince, a medium duty icebreaker that was formerly operated by the Canadian Coast Guard, to ferry dozens of people and the submersible craft to the North Atlantic wreck site.

The 5-person submersible, named Titan, is capable of diving 4,000 meters or 13,120 ft. “with a comfortable safety margin,” OceanGate said in its filing with the court.

It weighs 20,000 pounds (9,072 kilograms) in the air, but is ballasted to be neutrally buoyant once it reaches the seafloor, the company said.

The Titan is made of “titanium and filament wound carbon fiber” and has proven to “withstand the enormous pressures of the deep ocean,” OceanGate stated. OceanGate told the court that Titan’s viewport is “the largest of any deep diving submersible” and that its technology provides an “unrivaled view” of the deep ocean.

Chris Parry, a retired navy rear admiral from the U.K., told Sky News that the rescue taking place was “a very difficult operation.”

“The actual nature of the seabed is very undulating. Titanic herself lies in a trench. There’s lots of debris around. So trying to differentiate with sonar in particular and trying to target the area you want to search in with another submersible is going to be very difficult indeed.”

Anhinga spotted in Virginia Beach – Daily Press

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Jonathan Snyder photographed an anhinga perched in a red maple tree near the lake at Stumpy Lake in Virginia Beach. Anhingas are related to cormorants and look similar but lack the hook on the end of their beak.

Susan Gurganus sent photos of a family of Muscovy ducks with babies in the Indian Lakes neighborhood in Virginia Beach.

Joyce Hearn was surprised to see a wild turkey perched on her townhouse railing bordering a marshy creek near the Oceanfront in Virginia Beach. “Not too long after the turkey appeared, a red-headed woodpecker stopped by,” wrote Hearn. “I’m now wondering what might show up next!”

Joe DiGeronimo photographed a turkey vulture soaring overhead showing the distinctive “V” shape of the wings along the James River in Surry. Vultures clean our environment, feed on dead and decaying animals, and protect communities from bacteria and disease.

Kristin West took a photo of a Song sparrow in Sandbridge in Virginia Beach. “It was wonderful to hear it sing!” wrote West.

Reuben Rohn observed a veery at the Tidewater Arboretum in Virginia Beach. Veeries are medium-sized thrushes that hop on the forest floor foraging for insects and fruits.

A veery forages on the ground at the Tidewater Arboretum in Virginia Beach. Courtesy of Reuben Rohn

Laura Joksaite photographed a blue-gray gnatcatcher in her backyard in the Robinhood Forest area of Virginia Beach.

A blue-gray gnatcatcher perches on a holly branch in the Robinhood Forest area of Virginia Beach. Courtesy of Laura Joksaite
A blue-gray gnatcatcher perches on a holly branch in the Robinhood Forest area of Virginia Beach. Courtesy of Laura Joksaite

Pauletta Anglin had a common yellow throat visit her 11th floor balcony at the Oceanfront in Virginia Beach. “He is much too cute to be called common yellow throat,” wrote Anglin.

Benjamin Gerber had a close encounter with a mockingbird posing on a sign in the Western Branch neighborhood of Chesapeake.

A mockingbird poses on a sign in the Western Branch neighborhood of Chesapeake. Courtesy of Benjamin Gerber
A mockingbird poses on a sign in the Western Branch neighborhood of Chesapeake. Courtesy of Benjamin Gerber

Pat Nottingham spotted a bald-headed cardinal in the Deep Creek section of Chesapeake. A bald-headed cardinal is fairly common among cardinals when the weather gets warm as a result of mites. The feathers grow back when the weather cools.

George Schmitt photographed a female bluebird feeding mealworms to her baby in the Arrowhead section of Virginia Beach. “They can eat their weight in mealworms,” wrote Schmitt.

Ed Obermeyer sent photos of male and female hummingbirds at his backyard feeder in the Castleton neighborhood of Virginia Beach.

A female hummingbird visits a backyard feeder in the Castleton neighborhood of Virginia Beach. Courtesy of Ed Obermeyer
A female hummingbird visits a backyard feeder in the Castleton neighborhood of Virginia Beach. Courtesy of Ed Obermeyer

Jane Hughey sent photos of a female hummingbird at her feeder in the Indian River area of Chesapeake.

Mike Poirier photographed a honeybee gathering pollen from a magnolia flower in the Riverwalk neighborhood in Chesapeake.

Robert Rhodes sent a photo of a dew-laden spiderweb that he spotted while kayaking in Bennett’s Creek in Suffolk.

Connie Owen spotted a little green treefrog sitting on a leaf beside her front door in the Robinhood Forest area of Virginia Beach. “They are so loud when they ‘bark,’ wrote Owen. “It is amazing how such a small creature could create that sound.”

A green treefrog hangs out on a leaf beside a front door in the Robinhood Forest area in Virginia Beach. Courtesy of Connie Owen
A green treefrog hangs out on a leaf beside a front door in the Robinhood Forest area in Virginia Beach. Courtesy of Connie Owen

Terry Zawacki sent photos of a brown water snake sunning itself on a dock at Stumpy Lake in Virginia Beach.

Steve Daniel photographed a red-bellied water snake poking its head up through the wild roses at Stumpy Lake in Virginia Beach.

A red-bellied water snake peeks through the wild roses at Stumpy Lake in Virginia Beach. Courtesy of Steve Daniel
A red-bellied water snake peeks through the wild roses at Stumpy Lake in Virginia Beach. Courtesy of Steve Daniel

Cindy Morrison photographed a squirrel having lunch on her back patio in the Ridgely Manor neighborhood in Virginia Beach.

Anne Kane sent a photo of a squirrel hanging upside down on a hummingbird feeder in the Alanton neighborhood of Virginia Beach. “The squirrels enjoy getting a sugar rush to go with all the seeds they steal from the bird feeders,” wrote Kane.

Joseph Robbins photographed a ghost crab peeking out of his burrow on the beach in the northern portion of the Outer Banks in North Carolina. Ghost crabs have eyes on stalks that allow them to see in all directions.

A ghost crab peeks out of his burrow on the beach on the northern portion of the Outer Banks in North Carolina. Courtesy of Joseph Robbins
A ghost crab peeks out of his burrow on the beach on the northern portion of the Outer Banks in North Carolina. Courtesy of Joseph Robbins

Vickie Shufer, [email protected]

How to do yoga at home for free – Daily Press

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Practicing yoga regularly is an excellent way to build strength, flexibility, and balance. It also helps you de-stress and slow down an otherwise hectic day.

Whether you’re hoping to reap the heart-healthy benefits of yoga or you’re simply looking for a low-impact way to get moving and build flexibility, there’s a type of yoga for you — and you can do it without leaving home. You can find popular yoga styles, like Vinyasa (also called flow yoga), Hatha, and power yoga, on YouTube or through online subscription services.

Many of these classes are free and designed specifically for people doing yoga at home. One of the benefits of doing yoga at home is that it can be relatively inexpensive compared to in-person alternatives. All you need is a mat, some non-restrictive exercise clothes, and a willingness to get moving.

Starting yoga at home

Whether you feel prefer to exercise at home or you’re just looking for a low-cost exercise routine, it’s easy to start practicing yoga at home. The first thing you’ll need to do is find a place to do yoga. We’re all adapting to spending more time at home, so it helps to get creative with where you practice. You may need to move furniture around or scope out your yard, porch, or local park to find a good spot. Wherever you decide to practice, make sure you have enough room to move around on your mat without hitting anything or anyone.

When you’re first starting out, you’ll need some basic equipment that you may already have laying around the house. A yoga mat is key. You may also want to invest in some basic yoga supplies, like a yoga block. If you’re new to yoga and you are unsure of what you’ll need, it may be a good idea to get a yoga starter set. Most starter sets come with a yoga mat, a block, and a yoga strap.

When you’re ready to do yoga, make sure you’re wearing exercise clothes that don’t restrict your range of movement. It’s also a good idea to wear a fitted top or tuck a loose-fitting top into your shorts or leggings, so you’re not constantly holding your shirt in place during poses like downward-facing dog.

The best yoga mats for doing yoga at home 

Unlike many types of exercise, yoga requires very few supplies to get started. The only thing you really need is a mat. If you’ve done any type of floor exercise, chances are high you already have a yoga mat at home. If not, there are a few things you need to look for in a new mat.

It should be slightly textured or sticky, so you won’t slip while moving from one pose to the next. The mat should be on the thicker side so that you have plenty of cushioning to support your joints. Most popular mats are somewhere between one-fourth and one-half inches thick. The length of your mat is also something to consider if you’re on the taller side.

The best yoga accessories for doing yoga at home

As you develop your yoga practice, you may want to stock up on some yoga supplies. Most of these supplies are relatively inexpensive so you can easily keep your home workout within budget. The most popular yoga accessory is probably the yoga block. It’s a helpful tool for poses like the triangle pose and for modifying poses in general. If you enjoy more cardio-intensive yoga styles, like power yoga or vinyasa yoga, it may make sense to use a yoga towel to prevent sweat from absorbing into your yoga mat. A yoga strap and a yoga wheel are also great yoga accessories as you become more advanced.

Yoga tips for beginners

If you’re new to yoga or used to taking in-person classes where an instructor can quickly correct your poses, take the time to refresh your memory of central poses like chaturanga, downward-facing dog, and warrior I and II. You won’t have the benefit of an instructor watching out for you in real time, so do your homework. It’s better than getting hurt. If you’re a beginner, don’t get discouraged if you can’t keep up at first. Your yoga practice will improve as you build strength, flexibility, and balance.

When doing yoga at home, it can be difficult to stay motivated. It can help to build a routine into your yoga practice. Perhaps you can do yoga every morning or right before you go to bed. You could even find a 30-day challenge if you want to build a habit.

With so much free yoga online, it can be overwhelming to find and commit to just one thing. Rather than spending your time figuring out which option is best, focus your energy on finding what works for you. Spend a few days testing out different options and then pick one and stick with it.

The best home yoga classes

When looking for yoga classes, it’s important to keep a few things in mind: price, distribution method, and style of yoga. If you’re looking for free yoga classes, YouTube is likely your best bet. There are a number of YouTubers that offer wonderful, instructive yoga classes in a variety of styles. Yoga with Adriene offers an extensive library of yoga classes, including short, targeted classes and month-long yoga challenges, plus some meditations. If you’d prefer to stream yoga classes on your phone, the Down Dog App is a great option. It offers customizable classes for $7.99 per month or $49.99 per year.

Many gyms and yoga studios are also offering live classes online. Some of these classes are donation-based or available for a reduced fee. You may also want to check in with your favorite local yoga instructors to see if they’re offering live or recorded classes through services like Patreon. Taking online classes through a neighborhood studio or nearby instructor is a great way to support local businesses while practicing at home. Some yoga students have also found it’s easier to commit to a yoga class when they know their instructor is on the other side of a Zoom call waiting for them.

 

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Mass shootings and violence leave dead and injured across the US this weekend – Daily Press

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By MATTHEW BROWN (Associated Press)

Mass shootings and violence killed and wounded people across the United States this weekend, including four people found dead of gunshots in a small Idaho town, a Pennsylvania state trooper killed in an ambush, multiple people firing guns into an Illinois holiday crowd and bullets flying among teenagers partying in Missouri.

The shootings happened in cities and rural areas alike, following a surge in homicides and other violence over the past several years that accelerated during the coronavirus pandemic. This weekend also brought mass shootings in Washington state, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Southern California and Baltimore.

“There’s no question there’s been a spike in violence,” said Daniel Nagin, a professor of public policy and statistics at Carnegie Mellon University. “Some of these cases seem to be just disputes, often among adolescents, and those disputes are played out with firearms, not with fists.”

Researchers disagree over the cause of the increase. Theories include the possibility that violence is driven by the prevalence of guns in America, or by less aggressive police tactics or a decline in prosecutions for misdemeanor weapon offenses, Nagin said.

Only the Idaho killings fit the definition of a mass killing in which four or more people die, not including the shooter. However, the number of injured in most of the weekend cases matches the widely accepted definition for mass shootings.

Here’s a look at the shootings this weekend:

KELLOGG, IDAHO

Police in Idaho arrested a suspect in a shooting that killed four people on Sunday at a home behind a church.

Responding officers found four people, all dead from gunshot wounds, at a residence in Kellogg, according to the Shoshone County Sheriff’s Office and news reports. Idaho State Police said a 31-year-old man was detained, KXLY-TV reported.

A neighbor at the scene told the TV station that there had been an ongoing dispute between neighbors at the location. It happened behind the Mountain View Congregational Church, the Shoshone News-Press reported.

WILLOWBROOK, ILLINOIS

At least 23 people were shot, one fatally, early Sunday in a suburban Chicago parking lot where hundreds of people had gathered to celebrate Juneteenth, authorities said.

The DuPage County sheriff’s office described a “peaceful gathering” that suddenly turned violent as a number of people fired multiple shots into the crowd in Willowbrook, Illinois, about 20 miles (32 kilometers) southwest of Chicago.

A motive wasn’t immediately known. Sheriff’s spokesman Robert Carroll said authorities were interviewing “persons of interest,” the Daily Herald reported.

“We just started hearing shooting, so we dropped down until they stopped,” a witness, Markeshia Avery, told WLS-TV.

The White House issued a statement calling the violence a tragedy and saying the president was thinking of those killed and injured. Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker said in a statement that he was monitoring the investigation.

“Gathering for a holiday gathering should be a joyful occasion, not a time where gunfire erupts and families are forced to run for safety,” Pritzker said.

WASHINGTON STATE

Two people were killed and two others were injured when a shooter began firing “randomly” into a crowd at a Washington state campground where many people were staying to attend a nearby music festival on Saturday night, police said.

The suspect was shot in a confrontation with law enforcement officers and taken into custody, several hundred yards from the Beyond Wonderland electronic dance music festival.

A public alert advised people of an active shooter in the area and advised them to “run, hide or fight.”

The festival carried on until early Sunday morning, Grant County Sheriff’s Office spokesman Kyle Foreman said. Organizers then posted a tweet saying Sunday’s concert was canceled.

CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA

One state trooper was killed and a second critically wounded just hours apart in central Pennsylvania on Saturday after a gunman attacked a state police barracks.

The suspect drove his truck into the parking lot of the Lewistown barracks about 11 a.m. Saturday and opened fire with a large-caliber rifle on marked patrol cars before fleeing, authorities said Sunday.

Lt. James Wagner, 45, was critically wounded when he was shot after encountering the suspect several miles away in Mifflintown. Later, Trooper Jacques Rougeau Jr., 29, was ambushed and killed by a gunshot through the windshield of his patrol car as he drove down a road in nearby Walker Township, authorities said.

The suspect was shot and killed after a fierce gunbattle, said Lt. Col. George Bivens, who went up in a helicopter to coordinate the search for the 38-year-old suspect.

“What I witnessed … was one of the most intense, unbelievable gunfights I have ever witnessed,” Bivens said, lauding troopers for launching an aggressive search despite facing a weapon that “would defeat any of the body armor that they had available to them.”

A motive was not immediately known.

ST. LOUIS

An early Sunday shooting in a downtown St. Louis office building killed a 17-year-old and wounded 10 other teenagers, the city’s police commissioner said.

St. Louis Metropolitan Police Commissioner Robert Tracy identified the victim who was killed as 17-year-old Makao Moore. A spokesman said a minor who had a handgun was in police custody as a person of interest.

Teenagers were having a party in an office space when the shooting broke out around 1 a.m. Sunday.

The victims ranged from 15 to 19 years old and had injuries including multiple gunshot wounds. A 17-year-old girl was trampled as she fled, seriously injuring her spine, Tracy said.

Shell casings from AR-style rifles and other firearms were scattered on the ground.

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA

A shooting at a pool party at a Southern California home left eight people wounded, authorities said Saturday.

Authorities were dispatched shortly after midnight in Carson, California, south of Los Angeles, KABC-TV reported.

The victims range in age from 16 to 24, the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department said in a statement. They were taken to hospitals and two were listed in critical condition, the statement said.

Authorities said they found another 16-year-old boy with a gunshot wound when they responded to a call about a vehicle that crashed into a wall nearby.

BALTIMORE

Six people were injured in a Friday night shooting in Baltimore. All were expected to survive.

Officers heard gunshots in the north of the city just before 9 p.m. and found three men with numerous gunshot wounds. Medics took them to area hospitals for treatment.

Police later learned of three additional victims who walked into area hospitals with non-life-threatening gunshot wounds.

The wounded ranged in age from 17 to 26, Baltimore Police Department spokesperson Lindsey Eldridge said.

SAN FRANCISCO

Six people were injured after a “car-to-car” shooting in the streets of San Francisco on Sunday evening, police said.

Two victims sustained gunshot wounds, one with life-threatening injuries, in the moving shootout beginning shortly before 7 p.m., San Francisco Police Chief Bill Scott said at a news conference Sunday.

Suspects in two cars, a black SUV and a white sedan, “drove very recklessly and chased each other while engaged in gunfire” near the northern waterfront, Scott said. The area includes Fisherman’s Wharf, one of the city’s busiest tourist areas.

Three victims were injured by glass shards caused by “errant gunfire,” Scott said, with none of the injuries considered to be life-threatening.

Two girls, ages 10 and 16, were struck by one of the two vehicles while walking their bicycles across the street. The younger girl was injured and transported to a hospital with non-life-threatening injuries while the older girl was not injured, Scott said.

“It appears that this was an isolated incident and these individuals were targeting each other. We don’t believe this was random at all,” he said.

PHILADELPHIA

A 4-year-old boy was among five victims of a shooting in south Philadelphia Saturday night.

Police responded to the block shortly before 8 p.m. Saturday and found a 58-year-old woman with gunshot wounds to the legs, a 54-year-old woman with gunshot wounds to her wrist and leg, and the boy, who was brought to Presbyterian Hospital with a gunshot wound to the abdomen.

A 30-year-old man also arrived at the hospital with a gunshot wound to the wrist and a 40-year-old man was brought in with a gunshot wound to the abdomen. The last victim was listed in critical condition; all others were said to be in stable condition.

Police said the shooter was an unidentified person wearing dark clothing.

Netflix hypes ‘The Last Airbender,’ ‘Bridgerton’ at fan event – Daily Press

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Netflix gave audiences first looks at some planned and upcoming projects including “Avatar: The Last Airbender,” “One Piece” and the third season of “Bridgerton” at a fan event on Saturday.

The event, called “Tudum,” was live-streamed from São Paulo, Brazil with the participation of talent like Kevin Hart, Chris Hemsworth, Arnold Schwarzenegger, John Boyega and Gal Gadot.

The streamer announced the addition of Linda Hamilton to the “Stranger Things” season 5 cast, a third “Extraction” movie and more of the cast for “Squid Game” season two, including Yim Si-wan, Kang Ha-neul, Park Sung-hoon and Yang Dong-guen. They will join returning cast Lee Jung-jae, Lee Byung-Hun, Wi Ha-jun and Gong Yoo.

Lily Collins also teased some details about the fourth season of “Emily in Paris,” which she said will bring her ex-pat to Rome.

The live-action “Avatar: The Last Airbender” is one of the most eagerly anticipated series in the bunch. It stars Gordon Cormier as Aang, Kiawentiio as Katara, Ian Ousley as Sokka, and Dallas Liu as Zuko, who were seen in their character costumes for the first time.

Another series that had people talking was “One Piece,” a live-action pirate adventure based on the popular manga, which is wrapped and due for its premiere on Aug. 31.

But specific release dates for many are still to be determined as the Hollywood Writers’ Strike continues and uncertainty looms about whether actors will be joining the picket lines after their SAG-AFTRA contract expires on June 30. Netflix is one of the studios represented by the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (or AMPTP), the bargaining arm negotiating with the major guilds over issues such as residuals, minimum pay and the use of artificial intelligence.

How Norfolk police use 172 automatic license plate reading cameras – Daily Press

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Norfolk installed 172 automatic license plate reading cameras last month that can track comings and goings throughout the city.

License plate cameras have been around for a while. But what distinguishes these cameras, made by Flock Safety, is their use of machine learning to pick up on details about a car other than its license plate, as well as the nationwide database Flock is building out of its customers’ information.

Law enforcement and city officials in Norfolk see these advanced capabilities as a boon to public safety, but Norfolk residents and state lawmakers alike have sounded off about privacy concerns over the massive amount of data the cameras capture.

In the month the cameras have been operational, the Norfolk Police Department hasn’t completed or released a formal policy on use and storage of data that the cameras collect. A police spokesperson said a policy is in the works.

To understand how the cameras are used and parameters around the department’s use, The Virginian-Pilot spoke with a police lieutenant who oversees the camera program and a Flock company representative.

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How do they work?

The cameras, also called automatic license plate readers or ALPRs, are motion activated and capture still images, not video, according to Flock spokesperson Holly Beilin. The cameras read and record the license plate and document details about the make, model and color of the vehicle, as well as alterations, like a roof rack, bumper sticker or damage to the car.

Images are uploaded remotely to an encrypted cloud, where they are stored for 30 days. Because each vehicle is cataloged according to several individual characteristics, its movements can be tracked in detail.

In Norfolk, all sworn officers have access to the database compiled by Flock Cameras and can search for vehicles associated with crimes.

Flock Safety also allows its users to create hotlists — lists of license plates or vehicles associated with a crime. When a vehicle on a hotlist is logged by a Flock camera, officers get an alert.

The cameras will be an integral part of the Real Time Crime Center, which Norfolk Police Lt. Charles “Mike” Thomas oversees.

The center, which the City Council allocated $532,000 toward in the fiscal 2024 budget, is slated for completion in the fall and will be on the eighth floor of City Hall. It will synthesize data from live feed video cameras, Flock cameras and some privately owned cameras that share data with the police. Information like vehicle descriptions, background information about criminal suspects or victims, live feeds of video, and even how people involved in crimes know each other will be sent to officers in the moment.

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Where are they?

Flock installed 172 cameras across the city. The black slender cameras are unique, and fairly easy to spot. But the police department has not disclosed their locations. The Pilot is awaiting a response to a Freedom of Information Act request to learn where the cameras are.

However, police described the strategy for camera placement.

“It would be difficult to drive anywhere of any distance without running into a camera,” Police Chief Mark Talbot said in a May presentation.

Cameras were placed in neighborhoods with higher crime rates and 911 calls, as well as entrances and exits to the city, Thomas said.

“In those areas, we tried to place them such that if you commit a crime, the hope is that you would not be able to leave or come in from those areas without having a Flock picture, a Flock hit,” Thomas said.

The city also shares data with Norfolk Housing and Redevelopment Association, which purchased an additional 20 cameras.

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Who can search the database?

When police departments or private entities like homeowner associations buy the Flock cameras, they’re not only getting access to the technology; they’re also subscribing (for $2,500 a year) to Flock’s nationwide database that compiles information from the communities the cameras are in.

The data Flock cameras collect is not available automatically to all Flock customers, Beilin said. A private neighborhood association in Colorado, for example, wouldn’t be able to see data collected in Norfolk, and vice versa. But the Norfolk Police Department can grant access selectively to other departments, or have a one-way agreement where officers can see information collected by privately owned cameras, according to Thomas.

“Every jurisdiction that has Flock is able to share data with other jurisdictions and also see data that’s being shared with them,” Thomas said.

Police departments have to approve each other’s access the first time they request to share data, but after that request is approved, data can be shared freely, Thomas explained. He declined to say to which jurisdictions Norfolk Police Department has granted or gained access.

According to Talbot’s presentation to council in May, Flock cameras are in operation in Chesapeake, Suffolk, Hampton, Newport News, Isle of Wight and Franklin. They’re in the works for Virginia Beach and Portsmouth.

Norfolk Police Department owns the data its Flock cameras collect. Flock Safety can’t sell or share data with third parties.

The Flock system allows the department to set up roles for patrol officers and investigators with different levels of permission for accessing and managing the database. Thomas said patrol officers can receive alerts and search the database, but can’t add vehicles to the hotlist. Only investigators can.

“Within the search, you have to put in why you’re searching for anything,” Thomas said. “And it is for law enforcement purposes only. It’s going to work similar to any other database that we have. It can’t be used for personal reasons.”

Thomas said as the administrator, he can see hotlists and user searches. Although Flock images are deleted after 30 days, Beilin said user audit logs last forever.

As of right now, Thomas said, there are no guidelines for how often user searches or hotlists will be reviewed.

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How do hotlists work?

Another feature of Flock Safety is the ability to create hotlists — of license plates or vehicles associated with a crime that police can track.

“If another jurisdiction has a homicide, and they have a vehicle of interest, or a person who’s wanted for that homicide, they can put that vehicle into what they call a hotlist. And if we share data with that jurisdiction, it’ll pop up as a hotlist alert and allow our officers to try to track that vehicle down,” Thomas said. “It’s really as easy as it gets.”

For an investigator to enter a vehicle into the hotlist, a crime report needs to be associated with it, which Thomas said acts as an audit control.

“Obviously this isn’t a people-based program, so you can’t put people in (the hotlist),” Thomas said.

But vehicles registered to certain people can be added to the hotlist.

“We had a sexual assault suspect that we couldn’t locate, but he was in the hotlist,” Thomas said, describing how the cameras have been used so far. “Within 24 hours of being in the hotlist, he was arrested in another jurisdiction.”

Information associated with Amber Alerts, stolen vehicles or national databases like the National Crime Information Center can also trigger local alerts.

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Why is data stored for 30 days?

Flock deletes images in its database 30 days to the second after they are captured. That’s a default time frame that can’t be removed or extended, Beilin said.

But privacy advocates such as the American Civil Liberties Union have suggested use policies that require deletion of images after three days. New Hampshire state law mandates deletion after three minutes if a license plate doesn’t trigger an alert.

License plates can be checked against watchlists in seconds, and deleting data quickly means benign commutes or errands aren’t being tracked.

But Norfolk plans to retain the data for 30 days. Police say they intend to use the system not just to spot hotlisted vehicles, but also to review old images to track vehicle movement after a crime is reported. In that scenario, Thomas said “three minutes is obviously unusable.”

“Thirty days is what we believe to be a proper amount of time to have somebody in (the database),” Thomas said, adding that police are able to go back and search for a vehicle if a crime is reported after the fact.

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Lawmakers voiced different levels of support for the cameras.

State lawmakers took issue last month with a decision by the Criminal Justice Services Board to authorize localities to use American Rescue Plan Act grants to purchase automatic license plate readers.

Several said the board’s decision was a direct contradiction of the legislature’s decision to kill multiple bills this session that would have expanded use of license plate readers. The main concerns cited were privacy issues.

With the surveillance net widening in the commonwealth, two Norfolk delegates said they have concerns about balancing the crime fighting benefits of the cameras with residents’ privacy rights.

Del. Angelia Williams Graves, D-Norfolk, said she believes the cameras could be a helpful tool for police, especially for stolen vehicles. But she doesn’t support constant surveillance.

“I’m not a fan of having them on all the time; I believe there needs to be some balance,” Graves said, explaining she thinks the license plate readers should only be activated during specific incidents of concern.

Graves said legislators will need to consider potential rules regarding the use of the cameras when the General Assembly convenes next year.

“I would like to see some guardrails on it to make sure the information obtained is being utilized in a proper manner,” she said.

Del. Jackie Glass, D-Norfolk, said in an email she is preparing legislation that will mandate data collected by the cameras remains encrypted except under warrant or “narrowly tailored exigent circumstances.”

The Pilot also reached out to Mayor Kenny Alexander and all seven city council members to gauge their support for the cameras and to ask if they have concerns about the Flock cameras being implemented without a use and privacy policy in place.

Council member Courtney Doyle said, “I think they should absolutely be in operation.”

Former interim police chief Michael Goldsmith spoke about the Real Time Crime Center and the investment in Flock Safety cameras during the fall council retreat on Oct. 7 and at a council work session Dec. 13.

Talbot’s May presentation, Doyle said, was an update on something the council knew was in the works.

“I’m very comfortable with the implementation of the Flock cameras,” Doyle said.

Council member John Paige saw the cameras as a necessary compromise between safety and privacy.

“Public safety and what it means is changing,” Paige said. “People are more violent, quicker to lose their cool. And as we move forward, we’re all going to have to make sacrifices to be safe.”

But he added, “I don’t want to implement anything without preparing the people, explaining to people what it is and what it does.”

Council member Andria McClellan expressed skepticism about the cameras and said she wanted more information about how the cameras are used regionally and what state-level regulations might be in place.

Other council members did not respond to requests for comment.

Staff writer Katie King contributed to this report.

Cianna Morales, [email protected]

Chinese social media star dies trying to lose half her body weight; sparks calls for regulation of influencer industry – Daily Press

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A social media influencer’s death, which occurred as she was participating in an intensive weight loss boot camp in northwestern China, has sparked calls for regulation in the influencer industry.

The 21-year-old, known online as Cuihua, was attempting to inspire her followers by showing them she could lose more than half her body weight, reports CNN. However, her shocking death has resulted in Chinese state media releasing warnings over the danger of weight loss camps, as well as renewed alarm regarding the pressure women feel to meet societal beauty standards.

Concerns are also growing over the influencer industry as a whole, with Cuihua’s death happening weeks after another incident in which a young Chinese man died following a livestream of him binge-drinking alcohol.

Cuihua had been posting on Douyin, China’s version of TikTok, to keep her followers updated on her weight-loss journey. She was reportedly attempting to encourage her followers in their own fights against obesity, said Chinese state media outlets.

Recently, she’d posted footage of herself undergoing intense exercises, announcing that she had been weighing in at 156 kilograms (344 pounds) and was attempting to burn off 100 kilograms (220 pounds).

According to China National Radio, Cuihua had attended multiple weight-loss camps in various cities, and was able to lose more than 27 kilograms (60 pounds) in the two months before her death.

Local authorities reported they are now investigating her death, and the possibility that the camp was using excessive or improper training.

“Weight loss boot camps are growing savagely, with a lot of false health and advertising complaints,” said the state-owned news agency China News Services. “It is common for trainees to get injured during the unregulated training process.”

Because of concern over the effect influencers can have, China’s National Video and Television Administration and the Ministry of Culture and Tourism have recently moved to restrict “31 misbehaviors by livestreamers.”

After this most recent death, a popular comment surfaced on the Twitter-like website Weibo, calling Cuihua “another innocent life scourged by marketing and influencer culture.”

Dr. William Owen – Daily Press

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Award: Physician — Oncology

Dr. William Owen has attended many funerals for young patients, especially early in his career. But as treatments for blood disorders and cancer have improved, he’s found himself celebrating more with current and former patients as they graduate from school, get married and have children of their own.

Owen came to Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters in Norfolk 30 years ago to treat children at the Children’s Cancer and Blood Disorders Center and to be the medical director of the sickle cell disease program. He also is the academic medical director of the division of pediatric hematology and oncology at Eastern Virginia Medical School.

“Yes, I’ve attended funerals,” Owen said. “But we’re also able to see kids who grow through cancer treatment and have good outcomes. … There’s a lot of downs, but there’s a lot of ups.”

Owen said he entered medicine “on the upswing of better outcomes” for children with cancer. In the 1960s and 1970s, children with cancer didn’t do well, and care was largely aimed at relieving suffering, he said.

Today, with major treatment advances, 85% of children with cancer survive five or more years, according to the American Cancer Society.

Sickle cell treatments also are improving, but not as quickly. The disease, which mainly affects Black patients, did not get the same attention, federal funding or research dollars as other diseases, Owen said.

“It’s always been kind of an underserved population,” Owen said. “I like helping underserved populations, figuring out mysteries. That goes along with my interest in global health.”

Sickle cell is a group of hereditary blood disorders that result in lifelong issues with anemia, chronic organ damage and pain episodes. Many patients used to die before they reached adulthood.

Owen has been involved in clinical research that’s led to some of the treatments helping patients to live longer. He also has promoted sickle cell screening and education in this country and in Haiti and the Dominican Republic.

Sickle cell is difficult to manage because of all the problems it causes, Owen said. Treatments initially prolonged lives without improving them but in the last decade, progress has been made in decreasing complications, he said.

Tymiere Grayson has been a patient of Owen’s for 17 of his 18 years. By the time he was 9 months old, he had been hospitalized 17 times for sickle cell, said his mother, Genene Milligan.

They were living in New Jersey when Milligan did some research and learned about Owen and CHKD’s sickle cell program. Knowing nothing about Norfolk, she moved here so Owen could treat her son.

Grayson has had kidney and lung damage and needed a hip replacement, and he suffers from overall chronic pain. Owen has brought him “a long way,” Milligan said.

Grayson used to spend three out of four weeks a month in the hospital. Now he’s there about once every six months, Milligan said.

“Dr. Owen is just passionate about what he does,” she said. “I don’t know what we would have done without him.”

“He’s done so much for Tymiere, and also for me,” said Milligan, who was diagnosed in February with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, a cancer that begins in the lymph system.

Grayson was in the hospital for a pain episode, and Milligan was with him when she received her biopsy results.

“Dr. Owen was there on the floor and took the time to translate the results for me,” she said.

Owen cheered Grayson for graduating high school this June. Inspired by Owen, Grayson plans to be a sickle cell nurse.

Owen said it’s an honor to care for young patients like Grayson and be so involved in their lives.

“To see these kids get to normal milestones and be the given the opportunity to celebrate with those kids makes it all worthwhile,” he said.

Tides lose third in row on homestand, will need to clinch playoff berth in series at Nashville – Daily Press

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Despite a disappointing weekend of three losses in two days, the Norfolk Tides remain in excellent position to clinch a berth in the International League championship series. They just will have travel to do so.

The Tides lost 11-5 in a series finale on Father’s Day to the Worcester Red Sox before 8,152 at Harbor Park, stumbling into a rare three-game losing streak and squandering a chance to clinch the IL’s first-half title. It was the first time the Tides lost a series all season.

But Norfolk is 45-23 and, with the season’s first half scheduled to end June 25, is a prohibitive favorite to ensure a berth (and home-field advantage) in the best-of-three series, starting Sept. 26, that will decide the league champion.

The Tides, who lead the 20-team league by five games, haven’t been in the Governors’ Cup playoffs since 2015 and haven’t won the IL title since 1985, their fifth championship.

The team with a mathematical chance to catch Norfolk is the St. Paul Saints (40-28), who routed Louisville 12-5 Sunday. The Tides have a magic number of 2 — combining Norfolk wins at Nashville and St. Paul defeats at Toledo — to clinch a playoff bid. Those series will start Tuesday night.

The Red Sox (35-34) won four of six games in the series in Norfolk.

Sunday, Tides starter Bruce Zimmermann left with a 4-3 lead after six innings, but Worcester erupted for six runs in the seventh.

In that inning, reliever Dillon Tate walked all four batters he faced — all of whom scored — and didn’t record an out. Eduard Bazardo and Morgan McSweeney each yielded two more runs as Worcester broke open the game.

Tate is on a rehabilitation assignment from the Baltimore Orioles, working his way back from a right elbow flexor strain. Earlier this year, he was shut down after making 10 rehab appearances in a month because of a stress reaction in the elbow.

Last season, Tate had a 3.05 earned-run average in 67 appearances with the Orioles, but he hasn’t appeared in a major league game in 2023.

Daz Cameron belted a homer, doubled and scored three runs for the Tides. He, Robbie Glendinning and Colton Cowser each had two of Norfolk’s seven hits.

Worcester had 12 hits — including three apiece by Christian Koss, who was just a homer short of the cycle, and Niko Goodrum. Cam Booser got the victory with three strikeouts in 1 2/3 scoreless innings of relief.

Late Saturday

Before a sellout crowd of 12,164 on a Saturday night of fireworks, the Tides lost 8-6 and 5-2 in seven-inning contests.

In Game 1, Worcester’s Brian Dalbec was 3 for 4 with three runs. The Red Sox scored in four consecutive innings, capped by Dalbec’s homer in the top of the fifth, to go ahead 5-0 off Norfolk starter Drew Rom.

The Tides cut the deficit to 5-2 in the bottom of the fifth with Maverick Handley scoring on a Colton Cowser groundout and Ben DeLuzio coming home on a Connor Norby doubled.

In the sixth, the Tides pulled even. Robbie Glendinning hit a two-run double to center, then scored on Cowser’s infield single.

The Norfolk Tides’ Jordan Westburg is shown during an at-bat Saturday at Harbor Park.

But the Red Sox answered in the seventh off reliever Ryan Watson (3-3) with a go-ahead solo homer by Enmanuel Valdez and a two-run shot by Ronaldo Hernandez. The Tides’ Heston Kjerstad belted a home run in the seventh.

Game 2’s biggest blow, by far, was Valdez’s grand slam off Chris Vallimont (2-4) in the third inning. That gave Worcester a 4-1 advantage over the Tides, who were playing in the nightcap as the Norfolk Squeezers in honor of the orange drink.

Norfolk’s runs came on homers by Norby in the first and Lewin Diaz in the fourth, both off starter Brandon Walter.

Worcester’s Brendan Nail (2-0) and Andrew Politi, who gained his fifth save, combined for 2 2/3 innings of shutout relief.

INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE STANDINGS

(through some of Sunday’s games)

Team, W-L, Pct., GB

Norfolk (Orioles), 45-23, .662, –

St. Paul (Twins), 40-28, .588, 5.0

*Iowa (Cubs), 39-28, .582, 5.5

*Durham (Rays), 38-30, .559, 7.0

Louisville (Reds), 37-30, .552, 7.5

*Nashville (Brewers), 36-31, .537, 8.5

*Memphis (Cardinals), 36-32, .529, 9.0

*Omaha (Royals), 33-32, .508, 10.5

Lehigh Valley (Phillies), 34-33, .507, 10.5

Worcester (Red Sox), 35-34, .507, 10.5

Rochester (Nationals), 32-35, .478, 12.5

*Charlotte (White Sox), 32-36, .471, 13.0

Scranton/W-B (Yankees), 31-37, .456, 14.0

*Columbus (Guardians), 30-36, .455, 14.0

Buffalo (Blue Jays), 31-38, .449, 14.5

*Jacksonville (Marlins), 30-37, .448, 14.5

Toledo (Tigers), 30-38, .441, 15.0

*Indianapolis (Pirates), 29-38, .433, 15.5

*Gwinnett (Stripers), 29-39, .426, 16.0

Syracuse (Mets), 28-40, .412, 17.0

*Does not include Sunday’s result.

Speak out against book-banning in school libraries – Daily Press

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Power of one

Re “Superintendent of Virginia school district orders 108 books pulled” (June 5): The superintendent of Spotsylvania County Public Schools removed from school libraries a total of 108 books. I was shocked to see that most challenges are initiated by one parent.

Banning books is not about protecting children. It’s about discrimination against others. By banning books that a few parents object to results in impinging the rights of other readers, creating significant gaps in the knowledge for young learners, taking books away from someone who wants to read them, creating a false sense of reality for children, preventing the exploration process of others, and preventing books from changing the world.

Many of the banned books in question have become celebrated classics of literature. Book-banning is a weak response to ideas that scare us. To counter the practice, there should be more and more people who are speaking up against such censorship. Oppression and ignorance should not be allowed to win this battle.

Tazewell Hubard, Norfolk

The Tide

Virginia Beach has a youth problem: They’re moving away. I myself plan to move to greener pastures, and I can tell you that lack of public transportation and infrastructure is the biggest factor in my decision. I told my doctor that I biked and took public transit to get around Virginia Beach, and she labeled that a “high-risk behavior.” I’m inclined to agree with her, as I have had more than a few run-ins with injury as I have biked around Virginia Beach.

Extending The Tide to the Oceanfront would be a big step in the right direction, bringing more vibrant life back into the city of Virginia Beach. An opponent of this plan, former City Treasurer John Atkinson, once said that Virginia Beach was a cul-de-sac. A cul-de-sac is not where I want to live; I seek the community and walkability of urban areas. If you want to prevent the up-and-coming workforce from leaving the area, then make choices that reflect the changing world. Extend The Tide.

Max Lichtenstein, Virginia Beach

Difficult choices

Voting in national elections has become harder as both parties have become more extreme because of gerrymandering. My first votes were for liberal Democrats as that was my parents’ belief, but when I got a Master of Business Administration and got involved in a small business, I realized that conservative Republicans had the better policy of supporting small business and free enterprise. However, both parties have forgotten their basic beliefs, so I have voted for libertarians and third-party candidates such as Ross Perot.

Democrats have forgotten that former President Bill Clinton tried to end welfare as we know it by placing time limits on payments and adding work requirements. Republicans have forgotten that the First Amendment states, “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion” by trying to make abortion illegal based on the Christian belief that life begins at conception while Jews believe it begins at birth.

I am frightened by Biden’s excessive spending, open borders and weak foreign policy, but even more frightened by Trump’s narcissistic, anti-gay and anti-constitutional tendencies, which threatens democracy and our country even more than Biden. I like the recent growth of support for third parties and hope that I can live long enough to be able to vote for a traditional Republican or a third-party candidate, but I see the threat of Trump as so dangerous that I will have to vote for Biden so I can face my kids and grandkids.

Arthur Rosenfeld, Norfolk